the system or shaking up making history, clashing final

1
Today, sunny to partly cloudy, a warmer afternoon, high 66. Tonight, partly cloudy, low 50. Tomorrow, more clouds than sun, a shower, high 57. Weather map is on A16. VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,410 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2016 Late Edition $2.50 Continued on Page B11 Janet Reno, who rose from a rustic life on the edge of the Ever- glades to become attorney gen- eral of the United States — the first woman to hold the job — and whose eight years in that office placed her in the middle of some of the most divisive episodes of the Clinton presidency, died on Mon- day at her home in Miami-Dade County, Fla. She was 78. Her sister, Margaret Hurchalla, said the cause was complications of Parkinson’s disease, which was diagnosed in November 1995, while Ms. Reno was still in office. Ms. Reno’s tenure as attorney general was bracketed by two ex- plosive events: a deadly federal raid on the compound of a reli- gious cult in Waco, Tex., in 1993 and, in 2000, the government’s seizing of Elián González, a young Cuban refugee who was at the center of an international custody battle and a political tug of war. In those moments and others, Ms. Reno was applauded for dis- playing integrity and a willing- ness to accept responsibility, but she was also fiercely criticized. A First as Attorney General JANET RENO, 1938-2016 By CARL HULSE DAVID BURNETT/CONTACT PRESS IMAGES U(D54G1D)y+&!.!?!#!] Not long ago the Romanian artist Adrian Ghenie was a relative un- known; today he is a market phenom- enon whose work can fetch $9 mil- lion. PAGE C1 CULTURE C1-6 The Making of an Art Star CLASHING FINAL PITCHES IN SWING-STATE BLITZ Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump hopscotched from Penn- sylvania to North Carolina to Michigan on Monday in the final, frenzied hours of the presidential campaign, offering clashing clos- ing arguments as the sprawling map of the United States was re- duced to a string of must-win states. Accompanied by rock stars, ex- presidents, old friends and their grown children, the Democratic and Republican nominees plead- ed with voters to end a traumatic campaign with an emphatic en- dorsement of their visions for the country. In Philadelphia, Mrs. Clinton drew the biggest crowd of her 19- month campaign to the vast plaza in front of Independence Hall, where Bruce Springsteen, the bal- ladeer of working-class America, rhapsodized about her values and the candidate portrayed herself as a protector of freedom and equal- ity. “Tomorrow we face the test of our time. What will we vote for — not just against?” Mrs. Clinton asked. “Every issue you care about is at stake.” She concluded with an appeal to those who have waited decades for a female president. “Let’s make history together,” she said. In Manchester, N.H., Mr. Trump took the stage with his family at Southern New Hampshire Uni- versity Arena as “God Bless the U.S.A.” blared, blue laser beams il- luminated the dark hall and a smoke machine piped a haze over the crowd. Mr. Trump asked a country po- larized over his personality and tactics to embrace his plan to thor- oughly shake up Washington. “I am asking for the votes of all Americans, Democrats, Republi- cans, independents,” Mr. Trump said, “who are so desperately in need of change.” The contrasts between the can- didates and their messages were on vivid display in the campaign’s Donald J. Trump in Florida on Monday, and Hillary Clinton in Michigan. Mr. Trump visited five states on the campaign’s last day, and Mrs. Clinton visited four. DAMON WINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page P5 Making History, or Shaking Up the System This article is by Michael Bar- baro, Ashley Parker and Amy Choz- ick. HONG KONG — In the nearly two decades since Hong Kong re- turned to Chinese rule, the Com- munist government in Beijing has tolerated all manner of activity in the city that it generally finds in- tolerable on the mainland: annual vigils for those killed in the Tian- anmen Square massacre, newspa- pers’ publication of scurrilous gossip about China’s leaders, huge demonstrations for free elections. But by deciding to intervene in a local court case and essentially blocking two politicians from taking seats in Hong Kong’s legis- lature, China signaled more clear- ly than ever on Monday that there was a limit to its tolerance in this former British colony, which was promised a “high degree of auton- omy” in a treaty. The two young activists who are testing that limit are advo- cates of independence for Hong Kong. While being sworn in, they made a statement of defiance against Chinese rule, using a crude obscenity and a term that many consider a slur against Chi- nese people. In acting against them, the gov- ernment of President Xi Jinping has asserted new authority to set policy in Hong Kong, opening what could be a more chaotic era Hong Kong Elected Two Separatists. China Took Drastic Action. By MICHAEL FORSYTHE Continued on Page A8 The girl named Heaven lay curled up asleep next to her grandmother on the mattress they shared on the living room floor. The woman, Carmen Irizarry, had been the 9-year-old’s legal guard- ian for years, a stand-in for the girl’s troubled mother. Now, Heaven’s protector was sick, breathing from an oxygen tank af- ter a long hospital stay for acute lung disease. It was early in the morning of May 11, quiet in the half-light in the eighth-floor apart- ment in the South Bronx. Just before 5 a.m., Henry Mal- donado, Ms. Irizarry’s companion of 30 years, entered the room clutching a chef’s knife, the police said. In a fury, he thrust the knife at Heaven, then at Ms. Irizarry, back and forth, the blade cutting five times into Heaven’s torso and left leg. Her grandmother tried to block the blows. “Heaven,” she said, “go!” Those were Ms. Irizarry’s last words to her granddaughter, the girl told the police, and they very likely saved her from joining the grim tally of children killed by the people closest to them. In a city that has seen murder rates fall to historic lows, such deaths remain a stubborn strain of violence, one that too often has also exposed Grandmother’s Killing Lays Bare Dilemma in Child Welfare Work This article is by James C. McKin- ley Jr., Al Baker and Ashley Southall. Continued on Page A14 MURDER IN THE 4-0 A Troubled Household nytimes.com Get free, unlimited access to The Times online through Wednesday. LIVE COVERAGE Get on-the-ground reporting and photographs from around the country. ELECTION RESULTS Find race pro- jections and real-time results. LIVE CHAT Join Times journalists for updates and analysis. SOCIAL MEDIA Follow us on Twit- ter at @nytpolitics. Get updates and interviews on Facebook at facebook.com/nytpolitics. ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Presi- dent Obama was feeling a little sentimental. His shirt sleeves rolled up, his vowels slipping off the ends of his words, his last day on the cam- paign trail finally here, Mr. Obama soaked up an unseasonably warm autumn sun on a baseball field at the University of Michigan on Monday, and drank in the energy of his political finale. “We’ve got one more day, Michi- gan — one more day,” he said, gaz- ing out over a crowd of more than 9,000 at midday. But Mr. Obama was not quite ready for it to be over. “This is gonna be my last” — he caught himself — “probably my last day of campaigning for a while.” For Donald J. Trump and Hilla- ry Clinton, Monday’s cross-coun- try travels were all about tomor- row. For Mr. Obama, his travels here to Michigan, and then to New Hampshire and Philadelphia, were part victory lap and part nostalgia tour, as he was accompa- nied on Air Force One by some of his longest-serving aides, and was ushered in and out of rallies by the same U2 and Bruce Springsteen anthems that were the sound- tracks of his campaigns. But his core mission was to im- plore voters across the country to rally behind Mrs. Clinton on Tues- day, or see the values and ideals that fueled his rise and powered his agenda defeated. So Mr. Obama stumped on Monday with the fervor of a man battling to pre- serve his legacy and with the joy of one who has watched his ap- proval ratings tick higher as the presidential race’s tenor has sunk ever lower, savoring the almost palpable sense at Mrs. Clinton’s rallies that Americans will miss him when he is gone. “Whatever credibility I’ve earned after eight years as presi- dent,” Mr. Obama said, “I am ask- ing you to trust me on this one.” “I already voted,” he added. “I voted for Hillary Clinton, because An Energized Obama Stumps for Clinton, and His Own Legacy By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS and GARDINER HARRIS Continued on Page P2 Since May, the Astral, a repurposed luxury yacht, has helped rescue about 15,000 refugees trying to reach Europe by boat, mostly from Libya. PAGE A4 Mission to Save Migrants Levels of the most dangerous parti- cles soared in some places to more than 16 times the limit that India’s govern- ment considers safe. PAGE A5 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Thick Smog Chokes Delhi Riders of the Metro in Washington have endured months of overcrowding and disrupted service. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A10-11 A Subway System in Disarray With global climate change policies suppressing demand for fossil fuels, oil companies are starting to adapt. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 New Strategies for Big Oil A self-driving bus being tested in Finland travels at a slow but steady seven miles per hour and holds promise for reduc- ing cities’ reliance on cars. PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-6 Driving Slowly Into the Future Harry Belafonte PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 Zou Lihong, a Paralympic gold medalist in Rio, had an inspiring New York mo- ment in Sunday’s marathon. PAGE B7 Kindness After a Flat Tire Joseph W. Tobin, the Roman Catholic Church’s leader in Indianapolis, has been named the next leader of the troubled archdiocese. PAGE A12 NEW YORK A12-17 New Archbishop for Newark A woman described as emotionally disturbed reportedly shoved a Queens woman, 46, in Times Square. PAGE A12 Pushed to Death in the Subway Beef and pork prices are down, but an obscure pricing index may be keeping chicken artificially high. PAGE B1 Behind the Cost of Chicken For the fifth straight time on American soil, Columbus will host a World Cup qualifier against Mexico. PAGE B7 SPORTSTUESDAY B7-10 A Soccer Showpiece in Ohio

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C M Y K Nxxx,2016-11-08,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

Today, sunny to partly cloudy, awarmer afternoon, high 66. Tonight,partly cloudy, low 50. Tomorrow,more clouds than sun, a shower,high 57. Weather map is on A16.

VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,410 © 2016 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2016

Late Edition

$2.50

Continued on Page B11

Janet Reno, who rose from arustic life on the edge of the Ever-glades to become attorney gen-eral of the United States — thefirst woman to hold the job — andwhose eight years in that officeplaced her in the middle of some ofthe most divisive episodes of theClinton presidency, died on Mon-day at her home in Miami-DadeCounty, Fla. She was 78.

Her sister, Margaret Hurchalla,said the cause was complicationsof Parkinson’s disease, which wasdiagnosed in November 1995,while Ms. Reno was still in office.

Ms. Reno’s tenure as attorneygeneral was bracketed by two ex-plosive events: a deadly federalraid on the compound of a reli-gious cult in Waco, Tex., in 1993and, in 2000, the government’s

seizing of Elián González, a youngCuban refugee who was at thecenter of an international custodybattle and a political tug of war.

In those moments and others,Ms. Reno was applauded for dis-playing integrity and a willing-ness to accept responsibility, butshe was also fiercely criticized.

A First as Attorney GeneralJANET RENO, 1938-2016

By CARL HULSE

DAVID BURNETT/CONTACT PRESS IMAGES

U(D54G1D)y+&!.!?!#!]

Not long ago theRomanian artistAdrian Ghenie wasa relative un-known; today he isa market phenom-enon whose workcan fetch $9 mil-lion. PAGE C1

CULTURE C1-6

The Making of an Art Star

CLASHING FINAL PITCHES IN SWING-STATE BLITZ

Hillary Clinton and Donald J.Trump hopscotched from Penn-sylvania to North Carolina toMichigan on Monday in the final,frenzied hours of the presidentialcampaign, offering clashing clos-ing arguments as the sprawlingmap of the United States was re-duced to a string of must-winstates.

Accompanied by rock stars, ex-presidents, old friends and theirgrown children, the Democraticand Republican nominees plead-ed with voters to end a traumaticcampaign with an emphatic en-dorsement of their visions for thecountry.

In Philadelphia, Mrs. Clintondrew the biggest crowd of her 19-month campaign to the vast plazain front of Independence Hall,where Bruce Springsteen, the bal-ladeer of working-class America,rhapsodized about her values andthe candidate portrayed herself asa protector of freedom and equal-ity.

“Tomorrow we face the test ofour time. What will we vote for —not just against?” Mrs. Clintonasked. “Every issue you careabout is at stake.”

She concluded with an appeal tothose who have waited decadesfor a female president.

“Let’s make history together,”she said.

In Manchester, N.H., Mr. Trumptook the stage with his family atSouthern New Hampshire Uni-versity Arena as “God Bless theU.S.A.” blared, blue laser beams il-luminated the dark hall and asmoke machine piped a haze overthe crowd.

Mr. Trump asked a country po-larized over his personality andtactics to embrace his plan to thor-oughly shake up Washington.

“I am asking for the votes of allAmericans, Democrats, Republi-cans, independents,” Mr. Trumpsaid, “who are so desperately inneed of change.”

The contrasts between the can-didates and their messages wereon vivid display in the campaign’s

Donald J. Trump in Florida on Monday, and Hillary Clinton in Michigan. Mr. Trump visited five states on the campaign’s last day, and Mrs. Clinton visited four.DAMON WINTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page P5

Making History,or Shaking Up

the System

This article is by Michael Bar-baro, Ashley Parker and Amy Choz-ick.

HONG KONG — In the nearlytwo decades since Hong Kong re-turned to Chinese rule, the Com-munist government in Beijing hastolerated all manner of activity inthe city that it generally finds in-tolerable on the mainland: annual

vigils for those killed in the Tian-anmen Square massacre, newspa-pers’ publication of scurrilousgossip about China’s leaders, hugedemonstrations for free elections.

But by deciding to intervene ina local court case and essentiallyblocking two politicians fromtaking seats in Hong Kong’s legis-lature, China signaled more clear-

ly than ever on Monday that therewas a limit to its tolerance in thisformer British colony, which waspromised a “high degree of auton-omy” in a treaty.

The two young activists whoare testing that limit are advo-cates of independence for HongKong. While being sworn in, theymade a statement of defiance

against Chinese rule, using acrude obscenity and a term thatmany consider a slur against Chi-nese people.

In acting against them, the gov-ernment of President Xi Jinpinghas asserted new authority to setpolicy in Hong Kong, openingwhat could be a more chaotic era

Hong Kong Elected Two Separatists. China Took Drastic Action.

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

Continued on Page A8

The girl named Heaven laycurled up asleep next to hergrandmother on the mattress theyshared on the living room floor.The woman, Carmen Irizarry, hadbeen the 9-year-old’s legal guard-ian for years, a stand-in for the

girl’s troubled mother. Now,Heaven’s protector was sick,breathing from an oxygen tank af-ter a long hospital stay for acutelung disease. It was early in themorning of May 11, quiet in thehalf-light in the eighth-floor apart-ment in the South Bronx.

Just before 5 a.m., Henry Mal-donado, Ms. Irizarry’s companionof 30 years, entered the roomclutching a chef’s knife, the police

said. In a fury, he thrust the knifeat Heaven, then at Ms. Irizarry,back and forth, the blade cuttingfive times into Heaven’s torso andleft leg. Her grandmother tried toblock the blows.

“Heaven,” she said, “go!”

Those were Ms. Irizarry’s lastwords to her granddaughter, thegirl told the police, and they verylikely saved her from joining thegrim tally of children killed by thepeople closest to them. In a citythat has seen murder rates fall tohistoric lows, such deaths remaina stubborn strain of violence, onethat too often has also exposed

Grandmother’s Killing Lays Bare Dilemma in Child Welfare WorkThis article is by James C. McKin-

ley Jr., Al Baker and AshleySouthall.

Continued on Page A14

MURDER IN THE 4-0

A Troubled Household

nytimes.com

Get free, unlimited access to The

Times online through Wednesday.

LIVE COVERAGE Get on-the-ground

reporting and photographs from

around the country.

ELECTION RESULTS Find race pro-

jections and real-time results.

LIVE CHAT Join Times journalists

for updates and analysis.

SOCIAL MEDIA Follow us on Twit-

ter at @nytpolitics. Get updates

and interviews on Facebook at

facebook.com/nytpolitics.

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Presi-dent Obama was feeling a littlesentimental.

His shirt sleeves rolled up, hisvowels slipping off the ends of hiswords, his last day on the cam-paign trail finally here, Mr. Obamasoaked up an unseasonably warmautumn sun on a baseball field atthe University of Michigan onMonday, and drank in the energyof his political finale.

“We’ve got one more day, Michi-gan — one more day,” he said, gaz-ing out over a crowd of more than9,000 at midday. But Mr. Obamawas not quite ready for it to beover.

“This is gonna be my last” — hecaught himself — “probably mylast day of campaigning for awhile.”

For Donald J. Trump and Hilla-ry Clinton, Monday’s cross-coun-try travels were all about tomor-row. For Mr. Obama, his travelshere to Michigan, and then to NewHampshire and Philadelphia,

were part victory lap and partnostalgia tour, as he was accompa-nied on Air Force One by some ofhis longest-serving aides, and wasushered in and out of rallies by thesame U2 and Bruce Springsteenanthems that were the sound-tracks of his campaigns.

But his core mission was to im-plore voters across the country torally behind Mrs. Clinton on Tues-day, or see the values and idealsthat fueled his rise and poweredhis agenda defeated. So Mr.Obama stumped on Monday withthe fervor of a man battling to pre-

serve his legacy and with the joyof one who has watched his ap-proval ratings tick higher as thepresidential race’s tenor has sunkever lower, savoring the almostpalpable sense at Mrs. Clinton’srallies that Americans will misshim when he is gone.

“Whatever credibility I’veearned after eight years as presi-dent,” Mr. Obama said, “I am ask-ing you to trust me on this one.”

“I already voted,” he added. “Ivoted for Hillary Clinton, because

An Energized Obama Stumps for Clinton, and His Own LegacyBy JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

and GARDINER HARRIS

Continued on Page P2

Since May, the Astral, a repurposedluxury yacht, has helped rescue about15,000 refugees trying to reach Europeby boat, mostly from Libya. PAGE A4

Mission to Save Migrants

Levels of the mostdangerous parti-cles soared insome places tomore than 16 timesthe limit thatIndia’s govern-ment considerssafe. PAGE A5

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Thick Smog Chokes DelhiRiders of the Metro in Washington haveendured months of overcrowding anddisrupted service. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A10-11

A Subway System in Disarray

With global climate change policiessuppressing demand for fossil fuels, oilcompanies are starting to adapt. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

New Strategies for Big Oil

A self-driving busbeing tested inFinland travels ata slow but steadyseven miles perhour and holdspromise for reduc-ing cities’ relianceon cars. PAGE D1

SCIENCE TIMES D1-6

Driving Slowly Into the Future

Harry Belafonte PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19

Zou Lihong, a Paralympic gold medalistin Rio, had an inspiring New York mo-ment in Sunday’s marathon. PAGE B7

Kindness After a Flat Tire

Joseph W. Tobin, the Roman CatholicChurch’s leader in Indianapolis, hasbeen named the next leader of thetroubled archdiocese. PAGE A12

NEW YORK A12-17

New Archbishop for Newark

A woman described as emotionallydisturbed reportedly shoved a Queenswoman, 46, in Times Square. PAGE A12

Pushed to Death in the Subway

Beef and pork prices are down, but anobscure pricing index may be keepingchicken artificially high. PAGE B1

Behind the Cost of Chicken

For the fifth straight time on Americansoil, Columbus will host a World Cupqualifier against Mexico. PAGE B7

SPORTSTUESDAY B7-10

A Soccer Showpiece in Ohio